A
Boycott Of Israel: Something Has Changed
By John Pilger
08/23/07 "ICH"
-- --
From a limestone hill rising above Qalandia refugee
camp you can see Jerusalem. I watched a lone figure
standing there in the rain, his son holding the tail
of his long tattered coat. He extended his hand and
did not let go. "I am Ahmed Hamzeh, street
entertainer," he said in measured English. "Over
there, I played many musical instruments; I sang in
Arabic, English and Hebrew, and because I was rather
poor, my very small son would chew gum while the
monkey did its tricks. When we lost our country, we
lost respect. One day a rich Kuwaiti stopped his car
in front of us. He shouted at my son, "Show me how a
Palestinian picks up his food rations!" So I made
the monkey appear to scavenge on the ground, in the
gutter. And my son scavenged with him. The Kuwaiti
threw coins and my son crawled on his knees to pick
them up. This was not right; I was an artist, not a
beggar . . . I am not even a peasant now."
"How do you feel about all that?" I asked him.
"Do you expect me to feel hatred? What is that to a
Palestinian? I never hated the Jews and their Israel
. . . yes, I suppose I hate them now, or maybe I
pity them for their stupidity. They can't win.
Because we Palestinians are the Jews now and, like
the Jews, we will never allow them or the Arabs or
you to forget. The youth will guarantee us that, and
the youth after them . . .".
That was 40 years ago. On my last trip back to the
West Bank, I recognised little of Qalandia, now
announced by a vast Israeli checkpoint, a zigzag of
sandbags, oil drums and breeze blocks, with conga
lines of people, waiting, swatting flies with
precious papers. Inside the camp, the tents had been
replaced by sturdy hovels, although the queues at
single taps were as long, I was assured, and the
dust still ran to caramel in the rain. At the United
Nations office I asked about Ahmed Hamzeh, the
street entertainer. Records were consulted, heads
shaken. Someone thought he had been "taken away . .
. very ill". No one knew about his son, whose
trachoma was surely blindness now. Outside, another
generation kicked a punctured football in the dust.
And yet, what Nelson Mandela has called "the
greatest moral issue of the age" refuses to be
buried in the dust. For every BBC voice that strains
to equate occupier with occupied, thief with victim,
for every swarm of emails from
the fanatics of Zion to those who invert the lies
and describe the Israeli state's commitment to the
destruction of Palestine, the truth is more powerful
now than ever. Documentation of the violent
expulsion of Palestinians in 1948 is voluminous.
Re-examination of the historical record has put paid
to the fable of heroic David in the Six Day War,
when Ahmed Hamzeh and his family were driven from
their home. The alleged threat of Arab leaders to
"throw the Jews into the sea", used to justify the
1967 Israeli onslaught and since repeated
relentlessly, is highly questionable.
In 2005, the spectacle of wailing Old Testament
zealots leaving Gaza was a fraud. The building of
their "settlements" has accelerated on the West
Bank, along with the illegal Berlin-style wall
dividing farmers from their crops, children from
their schools, families from each other. We now know
that Israel's destruction of much of Lebanon last
year was pre-planned. As the former CIA analyst
Kathleen Christison has written, the recent "civil
war" in Gaza was actually a coup against the elected
Hamas-led government, engineered by Elliott Abrams,
the Zionist who runs US policy on Israel and a
convicted felon from the Iran-Contra era.
The ethnic cleansing of Palestine is as much
America's crusade as Israel's. On 16 August, the
Bush administration announced an unprecedented $30bn
military "aid package" for Israel, the world's
fourth biggest military power, an air power greater
than Britain, a nuclear power greater than France.
No other country on earth enjoys such immunity,
allowing it to act without sanction, as Israel. No
other country has such a record of lawlessness: not
one of the world's tyrannies comes close.
International treaties, such as the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, ratified by Iran, are
ignored by Israel. There is nothing like it in UN
history.
But something is changing. Perhaps last summer's
panoramic horror beamed from Lebanon on to the
world's TV screens provided the catalyst. Or perhaps
cynicism of Bush and Blair and the incessant use of
the inanity, "terror", together with the day-by-day
dissemination of a fabricated insecurity in all our
lives, has finally brought the attention of the
international community outside the rogue states,
Britain and the US, back to one of its principal
sources, Israel.
I got a sense of this recently in the United States.
A full-page advertisement in the New York Times had
the distinct odour of panic. There have been many
"friends of Israel" advertisements in the Times,
demanding the usual favours, rationalising the usual
outrages. This one was different. "Boycott a cure
for cancer?" was its main headline, followed by
"Stop drip irrigation in Africa? Prevent scientific
co-operation between nations?" Who would want to do
such things? "Some British academics want to boycott
Israelis," was the self-serving answer. It referred
to the University and College Union's (UCU)
inaugural conference motion in May, calling for
discussion within its branches for a boycott of
Israeli academic institutions. As John Chalcraft of
the London School of Economics pointed out, "the
Israeli academy has long provided intellectual,
linguistic, logistical, technical, scientific and
human support for an occupation in direct violation
of international law [against which] no Israeli
academic institution has ever taken a public stand".
The swell of a boycott is growing inexorably, as if
an important marker has been passed, reminiscent of
the boycotts that led to sanctions against apartheid
South Africa. Both Mandela and Desmond Tutu have
drawn this parallel; so has South African cabinet
minister Ronnie Kasrils and other illustrious Jewish
members of the liberation struggle. In Britain, an
often Jewish-led academic campaign against Israel's
"methodical destruction of [the Palestinian]
education system" can be translated by those of us
who have reported from the occupied territories into
the arbitrary closure of Palestinian universities,
the harassment and humiliation of students at
checkpoints and the shooting and killing of
Palestinian children on their way to school.
These initiatives have been backed by a British
group, Independent Jewish Voices, whose 528
signatories include Stephen Fry, Harold Pinter, Mike
Leigh and Eric Hobsbawm. The country's biggest
union, Unison, has called for an "economic,
cultural, academic and sporting boycott" and the
right of return for Palestinian families expelled in
1948. Remarkably, the Commons' international
development committee has made a similar stand. In
April, the membership of the National Union of
Journalists (NUJ) voted for a boycott only to see it
hastily overturned by the national executive
council. In the Republic of Ireland, the Irish
Congress of Trade Unions has called for divestment
from Israeli companies: a campaign aimed at the
European Union, which accounts for two-thirds of
Israel's exports under an EU-Israel Association
Agreement. The UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to
Food, Jean Ziegler, has said that human rights
conditions in the agreement should be invoked and
Israel's trading preferences suspended.
This is unusual, for these were once distant voices.
And that such grave discussion of a boycott has
"gone global" was unforeseen in official Israel,
long comforted by its seemingly untouchable myths
and great power sponsorship, and confident that the
mere threat of anti-Semitism would ensure silence.
When the British lecturers' decision was announced,
the US Congress passed an absurd resolution
describing the UCU as "anti-Semitic". (Eighty
congressmen have gone on junkets to Israel this
summer.)
This intimidation has worked in the past. The
smearing of American academics has denied them
promotion, even tenure. The late Edward Said kept an
emergency button in his New York apartment connected
to the local police station; his offices at Columbia
University were once burned down. Following my 2002
film, Palestine is Still the Issue, I received death
threats and slanderous abuse, most of it coming from
the US where the film was never shown. When the
BBC's Independent Panel recently examined the
corporation's coverage of the Middle East, it was
inundated with emails, "many from abroad, mostly
from North America", said its report. Some
individuals "sent multiple missives, some were
duplicates and there was clear evidence of pressure
group mobilisation". The panel's conclusion was that
BBC reporting of the Palestinian struggle was not
"full and fair" and "in important respects, presents
an incomplete and in that sense misleading picture".
This was neutralised in BBC press releases.
The courageous Israeli historian, Ilan Pappé,
believes a single democratic state, to which the
Palestinian refugees are given the right of return,
is the only feasible and just solution, and that a
sanctions and boycott campaign is critical in
achieving this. Would the Israeli population be
moved by a worldwide boycott? Although they would
rarely admit it, South Africa's whites were moved
enough to support an historic change. A boycott of
Israeli institutions, goods and services, says Pappé,
"will not change the [Israeli] position in a day,
but it will send a clear message that [the premises
of Zionism] are racist and unacceptable in the 21st
century . . . They would have to choose." And so
would the rest of us.
This article was first
published at the New Statesman
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